Skin Dancer

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Skin Dancer Page 1

by Haines, Carolyn




  For Ron O’Gorman

  Skin Dancer

  By

  Carolyn Haines

  Copyright © 2011 by Carolyn Haines

  carolynhaines.com

  This story is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication can be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, without permission in writing from Carolyn Haines.

  Cover art by Stephanie Ryan

  Acknowledgments

  With each book, I meet the most incredibly generous people who willingly give their time, talents and resources to help me tell my stories. This book is no exception.

  First I want to thank Patsy Kringel, research associate, and Colleen Kirby, assistant state librarian, at the South Dakota State Library in Pierre. These two professionals helped me with details of a region I’ve always loved—but never lived in. They went way above the call of duty with insight and suggestions. Any mistakes are mine alone.

  Thanks to Ron O’Gorman for his fine editing eye and surgical skill at cutting out dead wood.

  Marian Young, my agent, is the best. No writer could ask for better representation.

  SKIN DANCER has given me the chance to work with a story in a completely different way. I want to thank Stephanie Ryan for the artistic vision of the book cover. She loved the story from the very beginning. And Daryl Marcus, who took the typed word and gave it wings by changing it into electronic format and helping me set up for a print version. These two are part of 365scribes, a group I’m working with that’s devoted to bringing author’s beloved backlists back to the readers plus creating new titles.

  I hope all who read this will let me know their thoughts. My web site is www.carolynhaines.com and the remarkable Priya Bhakta has created a Facebook site for this book. It’s hard to get a writer out of the South, but if I could spend a summer anywhere, it would be in South Dakota. The land there simply speaks to me.

  Table of Contents

  Table of Contents

  Cover Page

  Copyright

  Acknowledgments

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  Prologue

  The sharp tang of burning spruce scented the cool night. Hank Welford squatted beside the campfire, patiently waiting for the coffeepot to finish percolating.

  “My flight out is at six tomorrow. You sure we’ll bag my moose by then?” the man reclining on an expensive sleeping bag asked.

  Hank glanced at Ashton Trussell, a Boston plastic surgeon who’d come to Criss County, South Dakota, to take home a trophy—an animal not even native to the area. The man had plenty of money and no ethics about how he got his moose. He was the perfect client for Hank, who had a great need for money and no ethics about how he staged a kill.

  “I’m sure.” He used an old shirt to grab the hot handle of the coffeepot as he removed it from the flames. “Want a cup?”

  “I brought something to help pass the night.” The doctor leaned over to his fancy bag and pulled out a bottle of Courvoisier.

  Hank passed him a tin cup filled with the strong brew. The doctor poured a good measure of the liquor into his cup, recapped the bottle, put it away, and leaned back.

  “How long have you been leading these hunting parties into the Black Hills?” Trussell asked.

  “A long time.”

  “You ever been caught?”

  “Nope.” Hank had been lucky. And careful. All it would take to put him out of business was getting busted by the game warden. Jake Ortiz didn’t mess around with illegal hunters. He pressed for the heaviest fine, including taking the hunter’s weapons, vehicles, and equipment. Canned hunts could also carry a prison term, depending on the judge and jury.

  It hadn’t always been that way in Criss County, but it was now. Jake Ortiz acted like he was the damn sheriff when it came to enforcing laws. “Don’t worry, Doc, you’ll get your moose and be gone before anyone knows we’re here.”

  “Good. I got enough trouble right now. I don’t need a hunting citation.”

  Hank glanced at the man’s diamond Rolex, his five hundred dollar hunting clothes, and his expensive Remington. So what if he was caught? He’d pay the fine and buy more equipment. Trussell was a plastic surgeon in Bean Town. He made more in a day than Hank made in a month.

  “Once the head is mounted, Zell’s will ship it to you.” Hank sipped his coffee and sat back on a felled tree. Trussell could mount the head on his wall and tell whatever story he liked about how he shot it.

  They were still two miles from Dixon Point where the moose was hobbled and waiting. The whole camp–out and hunt was an exercise in vanity for the doctor, who wanted to pretend that he was actually tracking an animal. Hell, he couldn’t find his ass with both hands.

  “Well, I’m going to turn in.” Trussell set his empty cup in the dirt.

  “Me, too.” Hank stood up to kick out the fire when a stick snapped in the woods. He paused, foot raised. He’d spent most of his life in the wilderness, and his survival instinct was well honed. Few creatures warned of their presence. He returned to his seat, listening.

  The fire crackled brightly, and he leaned back against the tree. Overhead, the stars were brilliant. He’d never been out of South Dakota. Never seen a reason to go elsewhere, even for a visit. He had everything he needed right where he was.

  The sound of something moving through the underbrush outside the illumination of the campfire made him sit up. This wasn’t right. Animals weren’t drawn to fire, they avoided it.

  “What’s that?” Trussell asked.

  Hank decided to have a little fun. A campfire tale for the doc to take home. Folks liked a hint of danger, as long as it wasn’t real. “Probably nothin’.” He paused. “But there have been several reports of strange goings on up here in the wilderness.”

  “What kind of ‘goings on’?” Trussell asked.

  “The local Indians believe there’s a spirit that lives out here, a brave who killed animals for their skins and wasted their meat. Sort of a Injun trophy taker, if you get my drift.”

  Hank bided his time, waiting for the next snap of a limb. “The story goes that he got a curse laid on him. His skin fell off, and he had to go around borrowing skin from other people.” He hadn’t thought of the story in twenty years. Now, though, he could tell it was working on Trussell. He’d get his money’s worth.

  “That’s some tale. Does it scare many of your clients? A ghost that borrows skin.” Trusse
ll was trying to sound bored.

  “I guess borrowing ain’t exactly the right word, since the Injun never returns it. He uses it for a time, then it sloughs off and he has to hunt for another…donor.”

  “Stow the bullshit ghost stories. I’m not interested.”

  “Hey, I’m just passin’ on some local tales. Some folks enjoy a few campfire legends.” He shifted around the fire, kicking dirt onto the embers. He hated to lose the warmth because the night had grown cold, but it was close on to midnight, and if he intended to get the good doctor up and moving by dawn, he needed some shut eye.

  “Sounds more like you’re trying to scare me.” Trussell rolled over in his sleeping bag. “It won’t work. Good night, Welford.”

  Hank grunted. The doc was right. Time for bed.

  The flames fought against the dirt he kicked over them, finally suffocating. In the sudden blackness, he sensed movement to his right. He turned slowly, trying unsuccessfully to pierce the darkness with his gaze. Something moved. Something big.

  He thought of bear and felt a whisper of fear. Most of the wild animals stayed away from humans. The truth was, he and other hunters had done their best to eradicate the bear and mountain lion population. They’d worked on the gray wolves, too, when no one was looking. Still, it could be that one of the predators had smelled them and come for a closer look.

  Whatever moved in the treeline had no fear of them. It made no effort to be quiet.

  The wind gusted and Hank heard a sound that made every hair on his body stand at attention. The gentle chatter of a bone rattle sizzled on the wind. “Fuck,” he whispered.

  “That’s not an animal.” Trussell unzipped his sleeping bag and sat up.

  “Somebody’s tryin’ to scare us.” Hank reached for his gun. As his fingers curled around the perfectly balanced weapon, he felt better. Some joker didn’t realize how easy it was to get shot in the Black Hills on a dark night.

  Beneath the rhythmic rattle of the bones was another sound, a soft chanting. Hank had gone to a few of the reservation powwows on grammar school trips, and he’d always been amused by the Sioux link to the other world, the belief in spirit journeys and the dancing and chanting ceremonies. About like praying–not much good except for wearing blisters on knees. Hank believed in a god that helped men who helped themselves.

  “Hey! Cut it out! Whoever you are, beat it!” Hank yelled. So far, he and Trussell had done nothing illegal. They were carrying high–powered hunting rifles, but there was no law against that. They hadn’t killed anything, so if it was the game warden having a joke at their expense, now was the time to get him to show his face.

  The low chanting and the clatter of the bones in the hollowed gourd continued unabated. With the wind blowing, Hank couldn’t tell how far away the sound might be coming from. He dug the flashlight out of his pack and swung the high beam into the treeline. Shadows leapt in all directions, and his finger tightened on the trigger of his gun.

  There was nothing to shoot. The night was empty.

  “What’s going on?” Trussell asked.

  Hank kicked the dead fire hoping for a burning ember, but the dirt had completely snuffed it out. “I’ve got to get some dry wood. We need some light.”

  He followed the flashlight beam to the edge of the woods before he realized the chanting and the rattle had stopped. The wind whispered among the fir fronds, a soft sigh of nature.

  “It stopped,” Trussell said.

  “Yeah.” Hank checked his watch. In less than twenty–four hours, the doc would be on a plane headed back to Boston and his tit–plumping, fat–sucking practice. And Hank would have the ten grand he needed to pay off the overdue bills on his four–wheel drive and his manufactured home.

  “Whoever it was, they musta wised up and moved on,” Hank said. “That’s a damn good way to get shot out here.”

  He turned back to the campsite. He’d figure out who was playing with him and get even at a later date.

  CHAPTER ONE

  A blast of wind swept up the steep slope and through the fir trees, rattling limbs and sending grit flying into Rachel Redmond’s face. She used the back of her hand to wipe her mouth and then licked her dry lips. She was the only woman in a group of four men, and she forced her gaze back to the hellish scene where two naked, headless bodies hung from a tree limb like dead game. With each gust of wind, the rope that ran through the dead men’s Achilles tendons sang a quiet complaint. It was an eerie, keening sound like a badly tuned funeral fiddle.

  The men had been decapitated and mutilated, one more severely than the other. Long strips of skin and muscle had been removed from their backs, stomachs, buttocks and thighs, as if someone had been harvesting the skin or inflicting the most intense pain possible. The idea made her want to look away, but she caught a glimpse of Jake Ortiz watching her. This wasn’t the time to show squeamishness.

  The scene was staged, a killer who had a specific agenda, whether it was a fetish or more personal. Someone had gone to a lot of trouble to set up the crime scene. Aside from some type of silver ornament jabbed into the chest of one body, there was a bamboo pole decorated with one feather. Footsteps around the body indicated that the killer, or killers, had moved in a repetitive circle around the bodies, a ritual of some kind, perhaps a dance.

  Beside the men was the carcass of a moose, and beside the moose were two hunting rifles, one new and very expensive, a pile of clothes and two sets of boots. There was no identification in the clothes.

  She walked over to moose, examining the gunshot to the chest that had brought it down. The animal had been shot at close range, the exit wound cavernous. It looked as if the men, poachers hunting out of season, had been removing the head for a trophy when someone had taken them by surprise and killed them. She hoped it was a killing with personal motivation, otherwise, all of the classic elements of a ritual killing were there. And ritual killers seldom stopped with a single act. Or at least that was the textbook wisdom she’d learned at the academy.

  “Should I cut them down?” Marston French, one of the Criss County Search and Rescue volunteers, asked her.

  “Leave them be for now. The forensic team should arrive any minute.” Until the techs processed the evidence, nothing could be moved or touched. The procedure was carefully outlined in the manual she’d memorized while training as a deputy. Even when she’d been studying at the police academy, beginning a career where she could make a difference, she’d never truly anticipated investigating a crime like this. The level of cruelty was beyond her comprehension.

  Jake started to step forward but she maneuvered herself in front of him. He was a state game warden and the dead moose would fall under his purview, except that it was now part of a murder scene. Her scene. Dixon Point was on a finger of county land that stretched deep into the state forest. This was her case, by default since Sheriff Gordon Gray was out of commission.

  “As soon as Gus gets here with the camera, make sure he gets a close–up of that silver thing pinned to the heavy one’s chest.” She spoke to Wilt Baker, another volunteer. She had to take charge and issue some orders or the men would view her as ineffective. It was bad enough that she was a head shorter than all of them—and almost a decade younger. And Jake’s protectiveness wasn’t helping.

  She turned to the three remaining volunteers. “Lonnie, would you take Beck and Gabe and see if you can find a campsite or vehicles or something. These men probably walked here to the Point, but they had to have a base or transportation somewhere. I’ll broaden my search here for the missing heads. If you get to a place where you have cell phone service, call and ask for some dogs to be sent up here.”

  “Sure thing, Rachel,” Lonnie said. “We’ll keep an eye out for the heads, too.”

  “Do that,” she said.

  She stepped closer to the bodies, avoiding the blood that had pooled beneath them. The bamboo pole and feather spoke of some kind of Native ritual. The ornamental silver had been skewered into the man’s chest
with what looked to be a porcupine quill. She couldn’t tell the purpose of the silver—if it was jewelry or what. Obviously hand–crafted, it glinted in the bright June sun and drew the attention of a big crow that watched from one of the trees.

  She bent to examine the footprints that surrounded the victims. Her first impression of a dance seemed right. The ground looked as if a troop of school kids had played ring–around–the–rosie. And where the hell were the heads? If the bodies had been skinned, was it possible someone had lopped off the heads like trophies? Rachel tried not to imagine it.

  “Deputy Redmond, can I send the moose down to the retirement home?” Wilt asked.

  “No.” She started to walk the perimeter of the scene.

  Jake came up beside her.

  “It’s tradition,” Wilt insisted. “We always send the meat from any poached game we get to the retirement home. Give the old folks some protein.”

  Jake put a hand on Rachel’s shoulder, a silent gesture of support, as he spoke. “Whoever killed that moose was pretty damn close, Wilt. The moose was likely drugged, and even though it’s cool up here, the meat might be spoiled. Do what Rachel says.”

  Rachel clamped her jaw shut. Jake was trying to help her. He didn’t realize that he undermined her with such behavior.

  When Wilt walked away, Rachel ignored Jake and moved behind the bodies, examining them from all angles. The man on her left had been a strong son–of–a–gun. The other body was lean, with more of a gym–sculpted look. Younger, too. Someone with money and time to devote to fitness training. The closest gym was an hour away, and it would be a simple matter to get a list of members.

  She continued walking the scene, using the Polaroid camera to document everything. The crime scene photographer would take the official photos, but her snapshots might prove useful.

  There was no way to tell the identity of the men. She’d have to rely on fingerprints or the tattoo of a pit viper on the large man’s chest. She snapped a photo. The killer had left that particular piece of skin, as if he were trying to be helpful in the identification of the bodies. The idea made her antsy, and she started to walk away, almost bumping into Jake, who’d stepped too close behind her yet again.

 

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